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voyageur
[ vwah-yah-zhur, voi-uh-; French vwa-ya-zhœr ]
noun
- (in Canada) a person who is an expert woodsman, boatman, and guide in remote regions, especially one employed by fur companies to transport supplies to and from their distant stations.
voyageur
/ ˌvɔɪəˈdʒɜː /
noun
- history a boatman employed by one of the early fur-trading companies, esp in the interior
- a woodsman, guide, trapper, boatman, or explorer, esp in the North
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of voyageur1
Example Sentences
He and his voyageur crew had just dragged their sled of furs across from the mainland, and were staying for the night.
Dressed in layers of work clothes, he sports a floppy knit hat and a rakish goatee that makes him look like he could be plying the Great Lakes as a French-Canadian voyageur as easily as farming in Vermont.
The murals depict a voyageur, a steamboat captain, a railroad surveyor and a laborer, all of them white.
I have a really good carry-on bag: the Tumi Voyageur Athens Carry-All.
Voyageur is the name the French gave to canoe men who carried goods to remote trading posts and brought back furs.
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